Bible study in summer
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Michele Marr
One year, teacher Sue Dodd broke her wrist. The next year teacher
Lori Bobo got sick. Worst by far, though, was the year vandals
threaded a running hose through one of the then-louvered windows at
the Huntington Beach Church of Christ just days before the start of
its annual vacation Bible school.
“The hose had been running for days,” said Dodd who discovered it
when she stopped by the building to pick up materials to prepare for
her class. “The carpet was soaked in the church and classrooms. The
pews and furniture were standing in water.”
But for the last five years neither that flood, nor illness nor
broken bones have prevented the church’s popular summer program from
going on.
“One way or the other we get it done,” said Dodd.
And according to Debbie Rojas, coordinator for the three-day Bible
school, the year of the flood was one of the most successful years
they’ve had.
“Our goal each year is to present stories directly from the Bible
in a fun way,” said Rojas. “We want the kids to learn, and we also
want them to have fun. We want them to want to come back the next
day.”
They seem to succeed. Children who are from the congregation, as
well as children from other churches, not only come back the next
day, they come back year after year. A lot of the children, like
Karen McMasters’ 6-year-old Amanda, attend the vacation Bible school
every year.
“The lessons are really, really great,” McMasters said, “just like
the lessons throughout the year on Sunday mornings and Wednesday
nights are, too. They relate what the Bible teaches, to life. I think
my daughter -- most of the time -- is a better child for having God
and Jesus in her life, for being taught these things.”
Amanda she said looks forward to the school, in part because all
of her friends from the church attend, too. For the small
congregation it’s a way to encourage families with young children to
get to know other families and their children better. Children, ages
4 through 12, are welcome and there is no fee for the program.
“We deliver fliers and do mailings to the community on a small
scale,” Rojas said. “We would love to have a year when we have a
little more interest than we can handle. That would really be great.”
The theme for this summer’s program is “Daily Challenges From
God.”
Lessons will explore a variety of character-building moral
challenges.
The first day of the program will focus on being truthful. The
second day will concentrate on being prayerful and humble. The final
day of the program will center on trust in God and obedience.
Each year for the past two years about 35 students have enrolled
in the program. Classes are age-appropriate. The curriculum is
written and the activities are designed for various childhood
developmental levels and abilities, but all the lessons share a
common theme.
First thing in the morning, the children meet in their classrooms
for lessons and a related activity. Then they gather in the church as
one large group to sing songs that reflect the lesson’s theme.
Later in the morning, they return to their classrooms for a craft
project that is also tied to the theme. The crafts give the children
something to take home with them that will remind them of what they
learned. Before they go home for the afternoon, they meet in the
church again for a summary of the day and its message.
“All the lessons are about things the kids, well all of us really,
face on a daily basis,” Rojas said.
* MICHELE MARR is a freelance writer and graphic designer from
Huntington Beach. She has been interested in religion and ethics for
as long as she can remember. She can be reached at
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